⦠Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné, vol. 1, 53 (no. 94).
This design for one of the bays in the Oxford Union was not carried out by DGR. âThe incident is that of the attainment of the Holy Grail by Sir Galahad who reverently receives it, while leading forward Sir Percival, whose sister lies dead on the ground beside himâ ( Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné I. 53 ). In 1864 DGR returned to the subject to execute the arresting watercolour commissioned by Ellen Heaton and now in the Tate (see DGR's letters to Heaton of June, July, and October 1864, Fredeman, Correspondence 64. 86; 64. 94; 64. 138 ).
The finished design for the mural is in the British Museum, along with an unfinished study.
See also the commentary for the mural that DGR did execute for the Oxford Debating Union, Sir Launcelot's Vision of the Sanc Grael.
While he was involved with these pictorial commissions, DGR began to work at his unfinished poem âGod's Graalâ, of which various drafts and notes survive in pages from DGR's notebooks. He worked from various Arthurian sources, not just Malory.
This collection contains 6 texts and images, including:
Tate Gallery watercolour
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
This design for one of the bays in the Oxford Union was not carried out by DGR. âThe incident is that of the attainment of the Holy Grail by Sir Galahad who reverently receives it, while leading forward Sir Percival, whose sister lies dead on the ground beside himâ ( Surtees, A Catalogue Raisonné I. 53 ). In 1864 DGR returned to the subject to execute the arresting watercolour commissioned by Ellen Heaton and now in the Tate (see DGR's letters to Heaton of June, July, and October 1864, Fredeman, Correspondence 64. 86; 64. 94; 64. 138 ).
Production HistoryÂ
The finished design for the mural is in the British Museum, along with an unfinished study.
PictorialÂ
See also the commentary for the mural that DGR did execute for the Oxford Debating Union, Sir Launcelot's Vision of the Sanc Grael.
LiteraryÂ
While he was involved with these pictorial commissions, DGR began to work at his unfinished poem âGod's Graalâ, of which various drafts and notes survive in pages from DGR's notebooks. He worked from various Arthurian sources, not just Malory.